In which LJ is not dead yet...

Feb. 1st, 2026 12:55 pm
halfshellvenus: (Default)
[personal profile] halfshellvenus
I was invited to join [profile] the_lj_revival, and added a bunch of new LJ friends as a result. If you still have an LJ account and miss livelier days over there, that community is a great place to start!

The warmer, sunny weather continues here (66oF is the expected high today), so I'll be bicycling this afternoon. But what I probably should be doing is reclaiming a mid-lawn flowerbed from the volunteer grass seeding and an encroachment of moss. The moss in particular has been making inroads in the last 6+ years, and we were gone for 3 of them (while the house was being rebuilt), so it has spread more than ever. Not sure of a good way to remove/kill it. Vinegar water didn't do much. One recommendation is baking soda, though I'm not sure how much the neighboring plants would enjoy that. :O

I recently finished watching Broadchurch on Netflix, and enjoyed it so much that I wish they'd managed more than just 3 seasons! I also watched The Other Wife on Acorn TV, mainly for the cast, and that was a wasted effort which just made me feel sad about Rupert Everett. :(

More Rupert Everett )

HalfshellHusband and our son and I all watched The Wrecking Crew (with Dave Bautista and Jason Momoa, on Amazon Prime), which was stupid fun. It's essentially an action-comedy. One of our son's friends said it reminded him of Liam Neeson's The Ice Road (Netflix), which is a retribution movie with unexpected dark comic touches. If you're looking for free, mindless fun, I recommend both.

And now it's time to pull it together and go biking before the day gets too late and I wind up riding into the sunset.

52/337: Quiet Urp

Feb. 1st, 2026 08:29 am
rejectomorph: (caillebotte_man at his window)
[personal profile] rejectomorph
Getting through Sunday. I'm feeling a bit nauseated. I might have eaten something I shouldn't have, and also have developed a bit of headache. My hope was to do some laundry today, but now I'm not feeling it. There's no place to puke in the laundry room. Maybe I'll put a bit of water in my footbath basin and put it beside the bed for emergency chundering, and then just nap for a bit. Other than the nausea it's a pleasant enough day, if still a bit on the chilly side. I wish I could enjoy it.


Sunday Verse )
fox_in_me: fox.in.me (Default)
[personal profile] fox_in_me


📝 Оригинальный текст записи
В тот вечер мороз опустился до −10. Выпало много снега, а проблемы с энергетикой всё так же тяжело и безысходно висели над городом.
Во время воздушных тревог вызвать такси почти невозможно: большинство водителей приезжие, они работают по навигатору, а во время тревоги он просто не работает.
Я давно не видел, как люди останавливают машины, «голосуя рукой», как раньше - ещё в детстве. Сейчас, когда кто-то так делает, я почти всегда понимаю: что-то случилось. Или человеку очень срочно.
И я стараюсь остановиться.
Так было и в тот вечер.
В свете встречных фар - без уличных фонарей и светофоров - я увидел девушку на остановке. Она ловила машину рукой.
Время было не самым поздним: вечерний час пик почти закончился, а из-за гололёда дороги были непривычно свободны. Я остановился, открыл окно - но она сразу села в машину. Это удивило: она даже не спросила, по пути ли нам.
Так совпало, что я ехал именно в её сторону.
Только когда она села, я заметил: осенние сапоги, очень кроткая юбка, одежда совсем не для зимы.
Так одеваются не потому, что не думают.
Дороги никто не спешил расчищать, поэтому я ехал очень осторожно - боялся не столько машин, сколько внезапно появляющихся пешеходов, которые то и дело перебегали дорогу в темноте. Всё это - под тихую инструментальную музыку, как будто кто-то специально поставил фон для разговора, который ещё не начался.
Девушка быстро разговорилась. Она была взволнована: опаздывала на встречу, такси не приехало, она просто замёрзла, стоя на остановке и ожидая неизвестно чего. Тепло в машине быстро согрело её - и за пять минут я услышал огромный поток жизни: откуда она, где живёт, что у неё происходит и чего она на самом деле хочет.
Я верю, что такие встречи не случайны.
Иногда именно они дают начало движению - не внешнему, а внутреннему. Когда что-то внутри наконец сдвигается с места.
В тот момент я и сам был не в лучшей форме.
Я был в состоянии, когда слова даются тяжело, а мысли слишком громкие. Когда внутри холоднее, чем снаружи, и ты уже не очень понимаешь, зачем продолжаешь держаться ровно. Я почти не говорил о себе, мне не хотелось, да и нужды небыло.
Я слушал. А потом начал задавать ей самые простые вопросы - не поучая и не убеждая, а будто вслух думая вместе с ней:
- почему ты ищешь опору в ком-то, заранее делая себя зависимой?
- зачем тебе одобрение со стороны, если решение уже принято?
- если есть страх - значит, там, куда ты хочешь, есть опыт. Почему бы не попробовать?
- если есть цель, зачем сейчас думать о сложностях, до которых ещё далеко? Главное - начать. Дальше будет видно.
Ехать пришлось больше сорока минут - сквозь темноту, лёд, дымящиеся канализационные люки.
Она рассказывала, что хочет выехать с ребёнком за границу. Даже имея здесь неплохую работу, она понимает: можно дать больше - и себе, и ребёнку. В хорошем возрасте начать новую жизнь. Перестать сидеть в квартирах и подвалах без света и тепла. Нормально спать. И, в конце концов, почувствовать, что значит - когда уважают то, что ты человек.
Она преподаватель в частной школе. Я знаю один очень удачный пример - близкий мне человек уже больше трёх лет живёт в Эстонии с ребёнком, начав там практически с нуля и имея сегодня больше, чем за всю жизнь здесь.
Мне просто хотелось поддержать эту девушку / женщину.
Через полчаса мне казалось, будто мы знакомы давно: столько она успела рассказать о себе. Но сути это не меняло. Я продолжал задавать простые вопросы, иногда просто молчал и слушал, не ставя перед собой никакой цели.
Ближе к месту назначения она сказала, куда едет, и что ребёнок остался с соседями - в том самом одесском доме, где соседи как родные. Где могут прийти без приглашения на обед или ужин, принести еды, поддержать.
Она ехала вечером заработать немного денег, чтобы всё-таки воплотить своё стремление в реальность. Начать жизнь заново.
Я мог лишь поддержать её.
В ответ она сказала, что очень эмпатична, и хоть я почти ничего не говорил о себе, она почувствовала: у меня внутри погода намного хуже, чем на улице.
Глаза, сказала она, это выдают даже в темноте.
Иногда достаточно просто остановиться.
Когда я довёз её до нужного дома, она улыбалась. Просто поблагодарила за то, что я остановился - и за то, что помог ей поверить в себя и свои силы. Наверное, это и правда важно.
Мне самому очень не хватает таких разговоров.
Когда можно с кем-то, кроме котов, просто поговорить о том, что тревожит внутри.
Такие встречи появляются в самый нужный момент.
И, может быть, мой ещё впереди.

Note translated in assistance with AI.

That evening the temperature dropped to −10. A lot of snow fell, and the problems with energy supply were still hanging heavily and hopelessly over the city.
During air raid alerts it’s almost impossible to call a taxi: most drivers are from out of town, they work using navigation, and during an alert it simply doesn’t work.

I hadn’t seen people stopping cars by “raising a hand” for a long time — like before, back in childhood. Now, when someone does this, I almost always understand: something has happened. Or it’s very urgent for them.
And I try to stop.

That’s how it was that evening.

In the light of oncoming headlights — without streetlights or traffic signals — I saw a girl at a bus stop. She was trying to catch a car with her hand.

It wasn’t very late: the evening rush hour was almost over, and because of the ice the roads were unusually empty. I stopped and opened the window — but she got into the car right away. That surprised me: she didn’t even ask if we were going in the same direction.
It just so happened that I was heading exactly where she needed to go.

Only after she got in did I notice: autumn boots, a very short skirt, clothes completely unsuited for winter.
People dress like that not because they don’t think.

No one was in a hurry to clear the roads, so I drove very carefully — afraid not so much of cars as of pedestrians suddenly appearing and running across the road in the dark. All of this was accompanied by quiet instrumental music, as if someone had deliberately chosen a background for a conversation that hadn’t yet begun.

She started talking quickly. She was agitated: she was late for a meeting, the taxi didn’t arrive, she had simply frozen while standing at the bus stop and waiting for who knows what.
The warmth of the car quickly warmed her up — and within five minutes I heard a huge stream of life: where she was from, where she lived, what was happening in her life, and what she truly wanted.

I believe such meetings are not accidental.
Sometimes they are exactly what gives rise to movement — not external, but internal. When something inside finally shifts.

At that moment, I myself wasn’t in the best shape.
I was in a state where words come with difficulty and thoughts are too loud. When it’s colder inside than outside, and you no longer quite understand why you keep holding yourself together. I hardly talked about myself — I didn’t want to, and there was no need.

I listened. And then I began asking her the simplest questions — not teaching, not convincing, but as if thinking out loud together with her:

— why do you look for support in someone else, making yourself dependent in advance?
— why do you need approval from others if the decision has already been made?
— if there is fear, it means that where you want to go there is experience. Why not try?
— if there is a goal, why think now about the difficulties that are still far ahead? The main thing is to start. The rest will become clear.

The drive took more than forty minutes — through darkness, ice, and steaming manholes.

She talked about wanting to leave the country with her child. Even having a decent job here, she understands: it’s possible to give more — to herself and to the child. To start a new life at a good age. To stop sitting in apartments and basements without light and heat. To sleep properly. And finally, to feel what it means when being a human being is respected.

She is a teacher at a private school. I know a very successful example — someone close to me has been living in Estonia with a child for more than three years now, having started almost from zero there and today having more than in an entire lifetime here.

I simply wanted to support this girl / woman.

After half an hour it felt as if we had known each other for a long time — she had managed to tell me so much about herself. But that didn’t change the essence. I continued to ask simple questions, sometimes just silently listening, without setting any goal for myself.

Closer to the destination she told me where she was going, and that her child was staying with neighbors — in that very Odesa building where neighbors are like family. Where they can come over for lunch or dinner without an invitation, bring food, offer support.

She was going out that evening to earn a little money in order to finally turn her aspiration into reality. To start life anew.

All I could do was support her.

In response she said that she was very empathetic, and although I had almost said nothing about myself, she felt that the weather inside me was much worse than outside.
The eyes, she said, give it away even in the dark.

Sometimes it’s enough just to stop.

When I drove her to the right building, she was smiling. She simply thanked me for stopping — and for helping her believe in herself and her own strength. Maybe that really matters.

I myself really lack such conversations.
When you can talk to someone — other than cats — about what worries you inside.
Such meetings appear at exactly the right moment.
And maybe mine is still ahead.

your favorite Tolkien

Feb. 1st, 2026 12:23 pm
calimac: (JRRT)
[personal profile] calimac
I missed this when it was published a year ago, but in a list of File 770's best articles of the last year I found Cat Eldridge surveying a bunch of authors on the question, "What's Your Favorite Tolkien?"

Most of them picked either The Hobbit or The Lord of the Rings, indeed some hadn't read anything else by him, and a few who picked one of those two didn't like the other. A few went for the tale of Beren and Lúthien or The Children of Húrin.

The respondent who's closest to my own views is Elizabeth Hand, who picked The Lord of the Rings because "it imprinted on me at such an early age ... it was still a cult novel, and you had a real sense that you were in some secret, marvelous group of insiders who had visited a place not everyone knew about." Sort of, for me: I'm Hand's age and also imprinted on it from an early age in the 1960's. But I didn't feel part of a group of insiders; I felt terribly alone and clutched the book by myself. From my first reading at eleven, I never found anybody else who'd read Tolkien's work and wanted to talk about it until I was seventeen.* Six years, with no expectation that the durance will end, is a long time when you're that young. As a result, when I did finally find the Tolkien fans - remember that this was long before the public internet - I wanted never to leave, and I never have. Half of what makes up my life has been built around this.

As a result of that intense interest, I have, like Hand, been drawn to Tolkien's other works. She particularly notes the "History of Middle-earth" series, and says "I'm continually so amazed by what this one man came up with, the intensity and single mindedness of his obsession. And I get sucked into it all over again." And that is quite close to what I feel. Not the intensity so much as the sheer boundless creativity of one mind, its ability to deploy the illusion of reality so profoundly.

But one reason to focus on The Lord of the Rings is that it's so large. It'd probably be my choice of desert island book. But word for word, because it's quite short, my favorite Tolkien is something that nobody on the list mentioned: Smith of Wootton Major. I once wrote an article explaining why I thought it was a perfect fairy-story: partly because of what the author chose to leave out.

*I identified with a line about Gollum in The Hobbit (my introduction to Tolkien, and also a favorite): he "always spoke to himself through never having anyone else to speak to." That sums up my childhood relation to peers in a nutshell.

3SP ficlet: Just the Rain (any)

Feb. 1st, 2026 03:08 pm
mxcatmoon: IDIC (IDIC)
[personal profile] mxcatmoon
For the prompt, any/any kissing in the rain, at [community profile] threesentenceficathon 

This one can be readers' choice of fandom even though I definitely had a specific ship in mind when I wrote it. 😉

Author: Cat Moon
Words: 129
Rating: G
Summary: They don’t notice the rain, only each other
Note: In one of those weird coincidences, as I read this prompt and started writing it, "It's Just the Rain" by Journey came on randomly, lending atmosphere and title (but not thematic inspiration).


Just the Rain )


An ancient desire fulfilled!

Feb. 1st, 2026 02:54 pm
oracne: turtle (Default)
[personal profile] oracne
I am learning to knit! I am very proud of my casting on, and am working on the tension while actually knitting. Today, I did multiple rows for the first time; I got up to row four before I tangled something too badly to continue and started over.

I am currently using a giant pair of kids' plastic needles that C. had from a kit she did last year, and some neon purple acrylic yarn. I also have a nice pair of circular needles that [personal profile] drinkingcocoa helped me to pick out at our local yarn store; I started with those, but am now seeing how a longer row works.

I have no idea how long it will take for me to knit something that I'd actually wear, but the point for me is the process. It requires some concentration plus being in the moment, and will be a good thing to do while waiting for things or, potentially, getting back into listening to audioplays and the like. Plus, it's more mobile than doing a puzzle.

My many friends who knit are so excited..

Birdfeeding

Feb. 1st, 2026 01:49 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Today is partly cloudy and cold.

I fed the birds.  I've seen a large flock of sparrows, two starlings, a male cardinal, and a wren.  The sparrows are widely foraging on the ground under bushes. 

I put out water for the birds.

EDIT 2/1/26 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

I refilled the hopper feeder.

EDIT 2/1/26 -- I did more work around the patio.

I put out more birdseed.

EDIT 2/1/26 -- I did more work around the patio.

I am done for the night.

fresne: Circe (Default)
[personal profile] fresne

Welp, Star Fleet: Academy is really enjoyable, and by episode 4 really digs its teeth into the Trek of it all. I can at least say that at this moment. Wonder Man, also quite worth a watch. The new Bridgerton, I have some quibbles with (where is Sophie's bag, why is Eloise still like that, elements of how their going with Franchesca who is the lead in my favorite book of the series), but I always like a Cinderella story. Having as it happens written several.


Turn of the Gorram Worm, which is Cinderella in Firefly(ish - its AU and its the verse not the characters) where every character is from a variation on the Cinderella story, including the male lead.

https://archiveofourown.org/works/295668


Also a Sith Cinderella in Star Princesses of Long Ago and Far Away

https://archiveofourown.org/works/591582


In other good news, I'll be retiring early as a result of inheriting enough money from my father to have exceeded my retirement goal. Thank you dad, your planning, and the very excellent County pension that you had for 30+ years. I've told work and will be working for the next month and a half to give them a soft landing. To give me a soft landing. Getting to exit on my own terms and handing over tasks that should never have been in my department to begin with. I just got them because I am a good tech writer.


The world, is, of course, on fire. So I've been protesting. Phone banking. Postcarding. I fear that things will get worse before they get better, but it's good to see the general reaction to the current WTF building. I had been very worried when Trump 2.0 started to see some resistance, but it was…ok the same middle aged/elderly women who've been doing this for the last decade, and that wasn't going to be enough. So, high school kids walking out of school. General strikes. I participated in the work walk out, which I mean…okay. My job right now is about giving work a soft landing. It turns out there's a lot more room in a schedule when you stop picking up new tasks and focus on how to gracefully hand over old tasks. 


Anyway, had my first serious conversation with K & P about possible consequences of going to protests, because No Kings is a party. I've been sanguine about the possibilities of being willing to protest and while I didn't expect the form of what's happening, I did expect the level of authoritarianism. Be nice if others had believed in '24, but ok. We're here now.


Yesterday, I helped a friend move boxes of her mom's stuff from her apartment to her renovated (mold begone) house. Which I might add are about three blocks apart. Her mom is dragging her feet, and said friend requested a Tactical Strike / Force of Nature, and I delivered. Three carloads that seemed to barely make a dent, but probably did make some room. Also, my friend can now threaten to get my help again if her mom doesn't keep dragging her feet on every aspect. 


Visiting another friend at a local Historical House / garden today. She's been ill since December and itching to go out. Though per usual her lungs are still phlegmy. 


Then after that, we'll see. A couple that I was close to in the past, but now are more FB friends have been going through it with one half being diagnosed with stage 4 cancer. I've been offering via FB to come provide support and this morning (given the word hospice has come up) emailed him. I'm trying here to be the opposite of Tactical Strike / Force of Nature here and just offer support if he needs it. We'll see if he takes me up on the offer. Both P and I are…happy is the wrong word, but willing to give some context on what the hospice experience is like and what to prepare for. Again, we'll see.


Ok, time to move to the next thing. Keep climbing these hills.



Monthly topic

Feb. 1st, 2026 08:54 pm
abomvubuso: (...I COULD MURDER A CURRY.)
[personal profile] abomvubuso posting in [community profile] talkpolitics
Hi again, dudes & dudettes! Time for our new installment of the monthly topic. The one you guys chose last time was...

The Return of Power Politics



And here's the poll for March!

What should be the next monthly topic?

1) Permanent Crisis Politics
2) The Battle for the Global South
3) National Identity in an Age of Mass Migration
4) The Privatization of Power
5) Political Predictions That Aged Like Milk

Feel free to suggest more...
potentiality_26: (Default)
[personal profile] potentiality_26 posting in [community profile] halfamoon
Title: Red and Cold
Fandom: Frankenstein 2025
Pairing/Characters: Elizabeth Harlander, light Elizabeth/the Creature 
Rating: PG
Summary: More than a ghost.
A/N: I've been wanting to write something about Elizabeth since I saw the movie, and the prompt "The Innocent" really reminded me of her. Also fills my 100ships table prompt #09 (Arctic).

Red and Cold )
  

Day 1 - Fic - Warrior Nun - Yasmine

Feb. 1st, 2026 07:13 pm
jacquelee: (WN: Yasmine thinking)
[personal profile] jacquelee posting in [community profile] halfamoon
Title: Finding Yourself in a New World – Chapter one: The Innocent
Day/Prompt: Day 1 / The Innocent
Fandom: Warrior Nun (TV)
Character/Pairing: Yasmine, Shannon, Mary, Camila, Lilith, Beatrice
Rating/Warning(s): non-graphic depictions of violence
Word Count: 4508
Summary: Yasmine, a librarian who used to be a nun, drives home one evening and suddenly finds herself in a new world. A world with spaceships and aliens, where she's expected to help her team fight monsters. After the initial shock, Yasmine finds that this world not only holds the adventures she had always dreamed about but that her team also becomes the family she had never had before.
Author's Notes: I decided to approach this year's Halfamoon a little unconventionally and am going to write an overarching fic for all the prompts, one chapter per prompt. The prompts really felt connected to me and it immediately brought an isekai to mind, which I then combined with a litrpg. It's my first time writing both and it's not following the rules for them very strictly, my goal is to have fun more than to follow the genre conventions meticulously.

Here on AO3

Come From Away

Feb. 1st, 2026 06:09 pm
watervole: (Default)
[personal profile] watervole

 I just got a subscription to Amazon and the extra for Apple TV, so that I could watch Murderbot - which was every bit as good as I had hoped.

 

Though I'm not sure the 20min episode format was the right choice.  I'd have liked them a bit longer.

 

Having got the subscription for a three month trial, I'm seeing what else are must-watches.

I've just watched the musical 'Come From Away' which was brilliant, and I highly recommend.  I had no idea what it was about, just took a punt on it.

It followed what happened in Gander, Newfoundland, when masses of planes got diverted after 9/11.  

 

It's a stage production, hardly any scenery apart from a dozen chairs, but some great singers!

 

'Pluribus' is probably next on my list - any other suggestions?

umadoshi: (kittens - Sinha - napping)
[personal profile] umadoshi
One link, which hopefully won't be paywalled: "Rachel Reid's wild Heated Rivalry ride" at The Globe and Mail. The whole "local girl makes good" element of the HR show taking over the world is a very nice cherry on top of the whole thing, and I really liked this profile.

Reading: I'm maybe 30% into Matt Dinniman's Dungeon Crawler Carl and wavering about continuing. I've gotten better about DNFing things, and this time I actually have the book out of the library, so the good old financial sunk-cost fallacy isn't in play. But I still don't like DNFing.

I've also read some more of Braiding Sweetgrass and reread vol. 2 of The Kurosagi Corpse Delivery Service.

Watching: Crunchyroll wasn't in the mood to work when we attempted to watch last week's ep. of Frieren, so we're two episodes behind on that. (Annoyingly, Netflix keeps saying it thinks we'd love the show, but only has season 1.) Hopefully we'll get caught up on the most recent ep. of The Pitt tonight.

On top of those currently-running things, we're now one episode into Midnight Mass.

Playing: Cult of the Lamb: Woolhaven continues to delight me.

Weathering: There's another storm heading in, due to arrive tonight, but it looks like it's veered enough that our local forecast is now for a somewhat more reasonable amount of snow than I'd been hearing before yesterday evening or so. Apparently it's also bringing fairly high winds, so there's the usual "will the power stay on?" worry. (Our neighborhood has been really lucky on that front this season, and [personal profile] scruloose and I are pretty well prepared, so it's not a huge worry.)

Working: I turned in the final volume (!) of Pet Shop of Horrors on Friday and immediately tried to switch to the next volume of Now That We Draw, since that's due mid-week, but my brain was Not Having It; I suspect it was the sheer tonal dissonance as much as anything. But then yesterday, what with the storm warning and all, I basically did the last four-fifths of the book in one sitting to make sure I at least had a workable draft, and now my brain is pretty crisped. (It's not a very text-heavy or tricky rewrite, and the translators make it pretty painless, so four-fifths is a lot at once but not the feat it would be with some series.)

So now I have a draft with just a couple tweaks still to be made and a final read-through to be done, and I'm tempting fate a bit by not trying to get that all off my plate today, but I think letting it rest for a day before reviewing it is extra important given that I did the draft so fast. So I'm gambling a bit, but also have something I can submit with caveats if need be, if we do lose power for three days or something.

Sleeping: Sleep has been distinctly Not Great for the last few (?) nights. I've been doing decently at getting to bed in a timely fashion and mostly not taking forever to fall asleep, but I've been having even weirder and more stressful dreams than usual and it's all been very restless.

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